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The 7 Most Terrifying Native American Monsters From Folklore

The Giant Owl Witches Of Native American Lore Called Tah-tah-kle’-ah Aquinah/Deviant ArtTah-tah kle’ -ah are giant owl witch monsters from Yakama tribal lore. Owls hold significant meaning in Native American cultures, and many tribes have their own myths related to these mysterious nocturnal birds. The Yakama, who live at the border between what is now Washington and Oregon states, say that the Tah-tah-kle’-ah were giant owl witches who once roamed the plains at night looking for people to devour.

The 8 Strangest Presidential Assassination Attempts In U.S. History

Go inside some of the most shocking presidential assassination attempts, from poisoned paper to failed hijackings to misfiring guns.Throughout American history, only four presidents have ever been assassinated: Abraham Lincoln, James Garfield, William McKinley, and John F. Kennedy. But several others have narrowly escaped presidential assassination attempts while in office. Sometimes, they survived only because of sheer luck. Other times, it took quick thinking on the part of bystanders or the president’s protectors.

The Escaped Slave Who Inspired 'Uncle Tom's Cabin'

After walking 600 miles to Canada in 1830, Josiah Henson returned to the United States to free over 100 more slaves.Uncle Tom’s Cabin Historic SiteJosiah Henson’s memoir inspired the title character in Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin. In June 1862, during the dark days of the Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln checked out The Key to Uncle Tom’s Cabin from the Library of Congress. Published a decade earlier, Uncle Tom’s Cabin was a runaway bestseller by Harriet Beecher Stowe that pushed scores of Americans to rethink their attitudes toward slavery.

The Nobel Prize-Winning Norwegian Explorer

He was an arctic explorer, a scientist, and a humanitarian who saved upwards of 7 million people. The biography of Fridtjof Nansen almost defies belief.Wikimedia CommonsFridtjof Nansen. Few historical figures present a resume as varied and magnanimous as Fridtjof Nansen. He was the first to traverse Greenland, ventured further into the Arctic than any man yet before him, and was an 11-time cross-country skiing national champion. When he wasn’t completing a feat of human endurance, he wrote scientific accounts of his adventures and became deeply involved in the global humanitarian crises in Russia and Armenia.

The Six Most Extreme Practices In the World

Extreme Female Body Modifications: Chinese Foot Binding Image Source: gb times Perhaps one of the most painful forms of female body modification was Chinese foot binding. The practice began in the late Tang Dynasty (618-960 AD) and grew in popularity during the Song Dynasty (960-1297 AD). Tiny feet were considered highly erotic—the most ideal feet were shaped like crescent moons and were no longer than three inches. Image Source: BuzzFeed